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Cricket - Sports

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

ISI urged SA not to fund Nawaz Sharif: WikiLeaks

ISI urged SA not to fund Nawaz Sharif: WikiLeaks

 Updated at: 1015 PST,  Tuesday, May 31, 2011
ISI urged SA not to fund Nawaz Sharif: WikiLeaks KARACHI: ISI asked Saudi Arabia not to fund Nawaz Sharif for his election campaign, a secret cable of 2008 revealed.

According to WikiLeaks, National Security Adviser Tariq Aziz told Asif Zardari that after being elected as a prime minister, Shah Mehmood Qureshi could challenge his authority, as Zardari was considering Qureshi as a PPP candidate for prime minister.

Aziz told US Ambassador Anne Patterson on February 15 that Saudi Arabia has provided heavy funds to Nawz Sharif for his election campaign in order to defeat Pakistan Peoples’ Party.

In the same meeting, he also told Patterson that ISI Director Nadeem Taj had met with the Saudi Ambassador to request Saudi Arabia to stop funding Nawaz Sharif. He also told the Saudi Ambassador that by doing so, the pact between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia will be violated in case Sharif returns to Pakistan.

On February 15, NSA Tariq Aziz told Ambassador that in the past four day he has met twice with Zardari, who asked him for “advice” on who should be prime minister if the PPP is asked to form a government. DG ISI Taj and Aziz urged Zardari not to pursue the premiership for himself, as it would split the party and reduce PPP’s national influence. Zardari raised the idea of becoming Prime Minister with Aziz on February 14. Aziz told Ambassador that this might have been possible in years past, but under the new constitution, which stipulates that the PM must be a member of parliament, Zardari would not qualify.

Aziz said he encouraged Zardari to support Amin Faheem for PM. Zardari complained that Faheem is a poor administrator who lacks the skills needed to run the government. Aziz admitted to Ambassador that this is true; when Faheem was Minister of Communications he spent much of his time at his home in Karachi. Aziz told Zardari that Faheem’s shortcomings could be mitigated by appointing a strong staff, but Zardari remained convinced Faheem was too weak to be PM.

According to Patterson’s comments in the secret cable, Aziz was clearly depressed and pessimistic about the possibility that Musharraf’s party could hold on to power in the next government; we see Zardari’s continuing contacts with the government as a sign that he will deal with Musharraf after the election. GO TO SOURCE

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Russian diplomats inspect bodies of Kharotabad victims

 Russian diplomats inspect bodies of Kharotabad victims

 Updated at: 1851 PST,  Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Russian diplomats inspect bodies of Kharotabad victims QUETTA: Russian diplomats arrived in Quetta and inspected the bodies of victims of Kharotabad incident, Geo News reported on Tuesday.

They collected photos and data of the victims, killed in allegedly fake encounter, for their identification.

Talking to media, the Russian diplomats said that they were waiting for the identification of the bodies, adding that it is premature to say anything till investigation is completed.

They further said they would decide in two days about their burial. GO TO SOURCE.

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Political games: Mirza returns, reshuffle in cabinet expected

 

Political games: Mirza returns, reshuffle in cabinet expected


Former home minister continues to carry out his duties.
KARACHI:  Former home minister Dr Zulfiqar Mirza has returned from leave after two months, leading to speculation that a major reshuffle in the Sindh cabinet is in the works.
Mirza, who is also a senior vice-president of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), went abroad on sick leave in the beginning of April. He was accompanied by his wife, Dr Fehmida Mirza, the speaker of the National Assembly.
According to a PPP official, Mirza returned two days after the death of the president’s father, Hakim Ali Zardari. He took a helicopter straight to Nawabshah, where he met President Asif Ali Zardari, who left soon after to meet US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Mirza then took the same helicopter back to Karachi, where his former security squad was asked to join him.
Being a home minister, Mirza’s security squad comprises 30 policemen, Rangers and Frontier Corps personnel. All security men were directed to wait for the former minister’s return and were receiving their salaries at home, said an official. The 15 to 20 policemen deployed outside his house continued to carry out their duties during his absence, he added.
Sources told The Express Tribune that Mirza is still doing the same work he did when he was home minister. A large number of police officers continue to gather at his Defence house every day.
It is expected that Mirza will be given an important portfolio once the provincial budget is announced next week. “I cannot disclose which portfolio will be given to him but I can assure you that it will be an important responsibility,” said a provincial cabinet member, who recently met Mirza in Nawabshah. “There are chances that he [Mirza] may be asked to resume his previous job because most of the cabinet ministers and our party leaders don’t call him former home minister.”
On another note, dismissing rumours about the chief minister being replaced, senior party members insisted that Qaim Ali Shah would continue his job as the chief executive. They said, however, that a few portfolios would be reshuffled.
“After the recent coalition between the PPP and the PML-Q, three members of the latter – one minister and two advisers – are to be appointed. We were waiting for Mirza to return,” a party member said. Referring to Dr Fehmida Mirza, he said that she is living in Karachi at the moment but she might preside over the upcoming budget session.
Most PPP leaders are refusing to reveal Mirza’s whereabouts. One member said that Mirza was supposed to return after the budget, given the party’s differences with the MQM over him. Before leaving, Mirza had said that it was the MQM that did not want to see him as home minister. MQM officials have, however, denied the allegations and said that Mirza’s removal was the PPP’s internal decision.
Sources said that Governor Dr Ishratul Ebad Khan, Health Minister Dr Sagheer Ahmed and Chief Minister Qaim Ali Shah met at CM House on Monday to discuss the budget and the developments following Mirza’s return. Even though the MQM and the PPP are coalition partners, Mirza’s open criticism has upset the partnership several times. MQM legislators have tendered resignations at least three times but they rejoined later. Senior PPP members said that the situation is different now that the PPP and the PML-Q are together.
The Express Tribune tried to contact Mirza but to no avail. PPP’s Taj Hyder suggested that it would be better to talk to Mirza to ascertain his whereabouts. GO TO SOURCE....
Published in The Express Tribune, May 31st, 2011.

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THE NEWS NEWSPAPER 31 May 2011

  NEWS
 
 
 
 
 
 
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EDITORIAL
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The visit by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton last week may well have been the turning point that it was described as. A number of things appear to be happening in quick succession. The CIA has had a sniff around the Osama bin Laden compound ...
 

The tragic sight of the bodies of small children wrapped in blood-stained sheets brings home the full horror of the war being fought in Afghanistan. The incident which took place in the southern Helmand province of Afghanistan is one of the worst ...
 
 

Even as we approach the one-year mark after the floods of 2010, and begin to think about the next monsoon season which now lies just over a month away, it is easy to forget that recovery from that disaster is not yet complete. There are many who ...
 
 
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Opinion
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Ameer Bhutto The present situation in Pakistan has gone beyond tolerance. There is only decay and decomposition all around us and the sinews and tendons that bind states and nations together are being consumed by the rot from within. This country is sliding ...
 
 

Dr Ashfaque H Khan
For three consecutive years Pakistan’s economy has been experiencing low economic growth and high double-digit inflation – a phenomenon known as stagflation (stagnation plus inflation). Economic growth has slowed to an average of 2.6 percent and ...
 
 
Munir Ahmed Baloch
The United States’ unilateral actions in Pakistan are in total disregard of this country’s sovereignty, as well as of international norms.
American duplicity in its relations with Pakistan is a matter of history. The US arms embargo in the 1965 ...
 
 
Zubair Torwali
It would not be naïve to write about the plight of a neglected people even as there is no dearth of national fiascos facing us. Other issues are significant enough to engage us but I found equally, if not more, shocking what I discovered when I ...
 
 
Dr Muhammad Yaqub
The writer is a former governor of the State Bank of Pakistan
A new beginning can be made in budget formulation by breaking with a past of fake statistics and window dressing. It would be much better to take the public into confidence about the ...
 
 
Rizwan Asghar
A famous saying goes “man is a threat to mankind”. In various epochs of history, man’s savage, brutal, and selfish nature has inflicted unspeakable damage upon humanity. Even modern civilisation has failed in its efforts to rein in his unbridled ...
 

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TRIBUNE NEWSPAPER 31 May

NEWS......




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EDITORIAL...
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Back in business

The prime minister has said that the breakdown in relations between the CIA and the ISI, that he had conceded to in an interview with a US magazine just weeks ago, had now been patched over. PHOTO: FILE
The war on terror which we remain caught up in, can only be won if there is cooper­ation betwee­n the two agenci­es.
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VIP security

In Karachi, being mugged, kidnapping for ransom, and burglaries at home, among others, are not uncommon.
In Karach­i, being mugged, kidnap­ping for ransom, and burgla­ries at home, among others, are not uncomm­on.
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Doctors’ strike

The strike by doctors in Quetta is approaching a month and it is becoming easier to quantify the human toll of this.
The strike by doctor­s in Quetta is approa­ching a month and it is becomi­ng easier to quanti­fy the human toll of this.
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Wildlife worries

The theft of deer from in Bahawalpur raises issues about how seriously we take conservation of animals.
The theft of deer from in Bahawa­lpur raises issues about how seriou­sly we take conser­vation of animal­s.
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A critical turning point?

Clinton offers to address Pakistan’s concerns in return for action against Taliban, al Qaeda. PHOTO: AFP
Pakist­an needs to go after the terror­ists to restor­e its dented image and veer it away from an isolat­ionist trajec­tory
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One year after attack on Ahmadis

Local residents and rescue workers take cover during an attack on an Ahmadi worship centre in Lahore’s Garhi Shahu neighborhood on May 28, 2010. PHOTO: FILE
Dozens are killed each year in attack­s based on belief. In 2010, this number stood at 99.


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LETTERS TO EDITORS
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Going after the terrorists

The likes of the TTP are free to pick and choose their target­s at will, while we wait and react.

India shining?

The World Bank‘s global povert­y line, at $38 per month, is three times higher than India’s urban level.

Land of VIPs

Pakist­an’s VIP cultur­e contin­ues to take from the poor for the benefi­t of the rich.

Pakistan — where is it heading?

China is not going to risk its $3 trilli­on foreig­n curren­cy reserv­e to threat­en Washin­gton for Pakist­an.

Pakistan — where is it heading? (II)

We are headed toward­s being a failed state as we have decide­d to surren­der before the dark forces of obscur­antism.

Engineering education

I had said that NED univer­sity has been left behind by some other engine­ering univer­sities in Pakist­an in resear­ch.

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DAWN NEWSPAPER 31 May

NEWS...

"A guiding principle for banning oil-based power projects may be announced as part of the federal budget."
(1 hour ago) Today
But the parties invited for the meeting by Chaudhry Nisar decided to meet again on Friday morning to draft a joint strategy for the budget session.
(3 hours ago) Today
The revelation indicates a dangerous gap of coordination in intelligence and security matters among different wings of defence services.
(4 hours ago) Today
The decision is aimed at keeping the budget deficit below four per cent -- a condition that will pave way for release by the IMF of a tranche of $1.3 billion.
(4 hours ago) Today
Dr Chishty had gone to see his ailing mother in India in 1992, but was implicated in a murder case.
(5 hours ago) Today

MORE TOP STORIES






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EDITORIAL..
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Stalled projectsStalled projects

IF the frequent cuts in public development spending in the name of austerity signify bad economic policy,...
May 31, 2011
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Railways off trackRailways off track

PAKISTAN Railways` woes appear to be never ending. A mixture of neglect, mismanagement and fate has...
May 31, 2011
Read more »
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Musharraf`s second comingMusharraf`s second coming

PERVEZ Musharraf`s is just too large a presence, courtesy his long years at the top, to be ignored....
May 31, 2011
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OPINION
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Today

‘Middle-income’ status

From the Newspaper
A RECENT World Bank report has confirmed Pakistan’s graduation to the ranks of middle-income countries. Does this elevation represent anything...
Today

Creating new provinces

From the Newspaper
THE debate about the creation of new provinces remains alive. Shahbaz Sharif`s remarks about looking towards Karachi in Sindh rather than the...
Today

Games we do & do not play

From the Newspaper
IT is about this time of the year that we would arrive in Karachi to spend our summer vacations. There we would meet our cousins from Multan;...

Record rise in emissions

From the Newspaper
GREENHOUSE gas emissions increased by a record amount last year, to the highest carbon output in history, putting hopes of holding global warming...


Few lessons learnt
IF televised coverage of last week’s assault on Karachi’s PNS Mehran airbase is anything to go by, it would seem that the industry still has lessons to learn in terms of covering such events in a responsible...
 
 
More water off a duck’s back
I HAD said a few weeks ago that after the Great Abbottabad Fiasco, every day will bring more twaddle from a destabilised and out-of-its-depth establishment which, whilst it knows it has no clothes, will...
 
 
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LETTERS TO EDITORS
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Controlling tobacco spread

THE No Tobacco Day today is an opportunity for tobacco users to quit a substance that kills 5.4m people...
May 31, 2011
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Ruling elite and taxes for public

BEFORE the Punjab chief minister embarks upon his plan to tax the rich by imposing a huge property tax...
May 31, 2011
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India’s most wanted list

THAT the Indians do not believe in doing their homework prior to embarking on a propaganda campaign against...
May 31, 2011
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Lahore Gymkhana golf ball

RECENTLY staff members (including myself) of one of the largest local banks were going on a client call...
May 31, 2011
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Questionable admission results for PhD

RECENTLY I had an opportunity to apply for MS/PhD programme at one of the most prestigious universities...
May 31, 2011
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Developing Gorakh Hill Station

THE Gorakh Hill Station is located at about 100 kilometres from Dadu in Sindh. Its height is 5,500 feet...
May 31, 2011
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Registration of FIR

THIS is apropos of the letter ‘Registration of FIR’. The writer has rightly pointed out the factor...
May 31, 2011
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Wapda: then & now

REFERENCE ‘50 Years Ago Today’ where two news briefs regarding Pakistan and Iran of May 24, 1961...
May 31, 2011
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School sanitation: learning from others

ACCORDING to a news feed by the IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre of May 26, in response...
May 31, 2011
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System, not individuals

THE common man has endured three miserable years under a democratic government. This is a lesson for...
May 31, 2011
Read more »
Securing military installations

THE terrorist attack on PNS Mehran has conveyed a clear message that even the sensitive national/military...
May 30, 2011
Read more »
 
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Afridi bids farewell to international cricket




KARACHI: Former ODI and T20 captain Pakistan cricket team Shahid Khan Afridi has stepped down from international cricket, SAMAA reported late Monday.

He hinted at reversing his decision on a condition, saying that he would not play cricket as long as the prevailing cricket board stays in power.

Boom Boom all-rounder Afridi has been leading ODI side of Pakistan cricket being a leg-spinner specialist for some time. Afridi failed to impress his fans with bat in world cup and later West Indies tour.

Upon returning from West Indies tour, Shahid made an statement on media against coach Waqar Younis over team selection row which soared his disputes with Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB).

Subsequently, PCB axed him as captain ODI team over violation of disciplinary act and assigned the duty to Misbah-ul-Haq for Ireland tour which prompted Afridi to excuse playing on Irish tour on the pretext of father’s ailment.

No sooner did the Pakistan cricket team whitewash against Ireland, winning both ODI of the series, than Afridi announced retirement form International cricket.

“I did nothing to breach disciplinary act,” Afridi claimed adding: “I think, I have done nothing wrong by suggesting someone what his job should be.”

Reacting over Afridi’s decision, chairman PCB, Ijaz Butt said Shahid did whatever he thought to be right. “This is his personal decision and I cannot comment on that,” he added. GO TO SOURCE..

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ISI-CIA relations have been repaired: PM

ISI-CIA relations have been repaired: PM

Published: May 30, 2011
PM says ISI-CIA relationship improving. PHOTO: FILE
LAHORE:  After weeks of shuttle diplomacy and a flurry of visits by high-level US officials to Pakistan, strained relations between the war on terror allies appeared to thaw when Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani said that ties between the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and the CIA have eased.
“Strained relations have now been repaired,” said Gilani while talking to journalists at his residence in Lahore.
Gilani said Pakistan will continue intelligence sharing with the US, adding that Washington had been told in clear terms that unilateral action inside the country would not be tolerated.
On a question of drone strikes, Gilani said they are counter-productive and two governments had yet to resolve their differences on the policy of drone strikes.
Relations with the US had turned sour after subsequent incidents involving the US contractor Raymond Davis arbitrarily shooting two men in Lahore in January, followed by a covert US operation deep inside Pakistani territory that killed al Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden in early May.
The relations between CIA and ISI had soured to such an extent that the prime minister admitted in a TIME magazine interview that the cooperation between the two intelligence agencies had broken down.
High profile visits over the past week and half included CIA Deputy Director Michael Morell, the US Chief of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen and the Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
However, after numerous attempts from both sides to salvage the critical relationship, it appears that the two agencies are set to work together again.
Last week, a group of CIA investigators were granted access to Osama’s compound in Abbottabad for nearly four hours.
Gilani said that Pakistan would continue its long-term strategic relationships with the US.
Energy assistance
The premier said that Islamabad sought help from the US to overcome the energy crisis, adding that he asked the Americans to invest in the energy sector to gain the favour of the Pakistani public.
He said he asked the Ameri­can leadership for more trade than aid, adding that market access to Pakistani businessmen would help strengthen the country’s economy.
Investigative commissions
Terming the formation of an independent commission to investigate the Abbottabad incident “imminent,” Gilani said consultations with different parties were underway and the commission would be constituted after that.
He added, however, that “there are no deadlines in politics,” according to a press release from the prime minister’s media cell.
When asked about formation of an investigation commission over the PNS Mehran incident, Gilani said the government is “reviewing the formation of a commission over [the incident],” adding that the Naval chief has also expressed his wish to probe the incident through a commission.
Gilani said the US has promised to give Pakistan the rest of the P3C Orion aircraft as per the agreement, and will also substitute the aircraft that were damaged during the terrorist attack at PNS Mehran.
He added that: “Terrorists are terrorists and there are no good Taliban and bad Taliban.” GO TO SOURCE..

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Aid agencies put on alert ahead of N.Waziristan operation

Aid agencies put on alert ahead of N.Waziristan operation

Pakistan to launch operation in North Waziristan. PHOTO: FILE
ISLAMABAD: Humanitarian agencies active in Pakistan’s northwest have been quietly told to prepare for up to 365,000 displaced people in advance of a military offensive against North Waziristan, a senior official with an international humanitarian agency said on Monday.
The official, who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject, was responding to a media report in a local newspaper that Pakistan will launch a military offensive against Al Qaeda and Taliban safe havens in the Afghan border regions.

“Humanitarian agencies operating in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa were given the heads up two weeks ago by the authorities of a possible displacement of up to 50,000 families,” he said, referring to the FATA and the northwest province.
A similar tip-off in 2009 preceded a military offensive in neighbouring South Waziristan by about five months, he said. Other aid agencies were not immediately available for comment.
The report in Pakistan’s The News newspaper comes just days after US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reiterated a U.S. demand to tackle sanctuaries for Al Qaeda and the Taliban on the Afghan border.
An understanding for an offensive in North Waziristan, the main sanctuary in Pakistan for militants fighting in Afghanistan, was reached when Clinton and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen visited Pakistan last week, the News reported.
The United States has long demanded that Pakistan attack the region to eliminate the Haqqani network, one of the deadliest Afghan militant factions fighting US troops in Afghanistan.
Pakistan has been reluctant to do so, but it has come under more pressure and its performance in fighting militancy is under scrutiny after Osama bin Laden was discovered living in the country.
The News quoted unidentified “highly placed sources” as saying Pakistan’s air force would soften up militant targets under the “targeted military offensive” before ground operations were launched.
Pakistani officials were not immediately available for comment. A US embassy official had no immediate comment. The newspaper said a “joint operation” with allies had been discussed but no decision had been taken because of sensitivities.
Sensitivity of a Pak-US joint operation
“In case the two sides agreed to go for a joint action, it would be the first time in the present war (on militancy) that foreign boots will get a chance to be on Pakistani soil with the consent of the host country.”
That could be highly risky for Pakistan’s generals.
Some analysts say any joint US-Pakistani operation would subject the army to even more public criticism in a country where anti-US feeling runs deep.
“The reaction could be even more vociferous, just because everybody is so suspicious — as well as dismissive – of American interference,” said Imtiaz Gul, author of “The Most Dangerous Place”, a book about Pakistan’s militant strongholds.
“People already feel so humiliated because of this Osama bin Laden thing and now they will have another reason to react.”
But the South Asian nation, dependent on billions of dollars in US aid, is under more pressure than ever to show it is serious about tackling militancy.
Attacking US enemies in North Waziristan may be one way of repairing ties with Washington which were badly damaged by the Bin Laden affair.
Pakistan maintains about 140,000 troops in the northwest, including about 34,000 in North Waziristan, but says they are too stretched fighting Pakistani Taliban insurgents in other parts of the region to tackle North Waziristan. GO TO SOURCE...

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Musharraf intended to dissolve parliament: WikiLeaks


WikiLeaks new cable revealed that Musharraf wanted to dissolve the National Assembly in 2008.


The cable sent by former US ambassador in Pakistan Anne Woods Patterson on July 25, 2008 divulged that Pervez Musharraf wanted the US backing for his presidency as he wanted to dissolve the National Assembly to prolong his tenure. Fear of public uprising refrained Musharraf from dissolving the government.

According to the US diplomatic cable, Anne Patterson wrote that Nawaz Sharif had launched a campaign against Musharraf to mould public opinion in his favour.

She wrote that Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani could ask Musharraf to quit respectfully. GO TO SOURCE....

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Monday, May 30, 2011

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Sunday, May 29, 2011

Islamic militants train near bin Laden’s compound

Islamic militants train near bin Laden’s compound

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Hafiz Saeed (center), the leader of banned Islamic group Jamaat-ud-Dawa, sits among religious leaders during a rally against India and the United States in Lahore, Pakistan. Accounts gathered by the Associated Press add to suspicion that Pakistan is accepting U.S. aid to fight militants while tolerating and in some cases encouraging extremism.ASSOCIATED PRESS Hafiz Saeed (center), the leader of banned Islamic group Jamaat-ud-Dawa, sits among religious leaders during a rally against India and the United States in Lahore, Pakistan. Accounts gathered by the Associated Press add to suspicion that Pakistan is accepting U.S. aid to fight militants while tolerating and in some cases encouraging extremism.

GULI BADRAL, Pakistan | In this Pakistani village surrounded by forests and glacial streams just 35 miles from where Osama bin Laden was killed, people become uneasy when asked what goes on up the mountain.
It’s where villagers avoid cutting pine trees for firewood - and where they know not to ask questions.
When pressed, they say it’s a secret training complex for Islamic militants and that the Pakistani army is aware of it. The army denies that it exists.
Accounts gathered by the Associated Press in the Ughi area of Mansehra district add to suspicion that Pakistan is playing a “double game” - that is, accepting U.S. aid to fight militants on the one hand but tolerating and in some cases encouraging and harnessing the power of extremism on the other.
Three men who identified themselves as mujahedeen - militants - told the AP that the training complex is one of at least three in the region that among them house hundreds of recruits.
The mission, the three say, is aimed at taking recruits to Kashmir to fight Pakistan’s archenemy, India.
But Kashmiri veterans have been known to join forces with al Qaeda and other terrorist groups, including those fighting the U.S. and its allies in Afghanistan and elsewhere.
The charges of Pakistani duplicity have gathered strength in the aftermath of the May 2 U.S. raid against bin Laden, who was hiding in the army town of Abbottabad and a short walk from a military academy.
Pakistani officials have denied any collusion, but the country is coming under renewed pressure to abandon its links to all Islamist militant networks.
In 2001, Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf said the country was severing its ties to jihadi groups amid intense U.S. pressure after the Sept. 11 attacks, but few are convinced that has happened.
The Mansehra area, a roughly four-hour drive north of the capital, Islamabad, was known to have hosted state-backed militant groups in the 1990s. The region was considered ideal for such activities largely because it is so close to Kashmir - about 25 miles from Pakistani-administered Kashmir and about 45 miles from the boundary of the Indian-controlled part of Kashmir. Both countries claim the territory in its entirety.
When contacted by the AP last week, the army denied that any training camps or other facilities are hidden away in the Mansehra area. “The allegations are baseless,” said spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas.
In Guli Badral, however, locals say extremists and men whom they presume to be soldiers are familiar sights in the village square, where they shop for meat, flour and beans before getting back into pickup trucks for the two-hour trip along a rough track to the training camp.
The three militants who spoke to the AP about the camps did not give their names and asked that the names of their organizations not be published. They said the road leading to one of the larger camps, near the village of Khatai, has an army checkpoint.
Militants and villagers alike gave the same advice to an AP team: Do not attempt to get any closer. It’s too dangerous. GO TO SOURCE....

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Friday, May 27, 2011

No evidence Pakistan govt knew where OBL was: Clinton

No evidence Pakistan govt knew where OBL was: Clinton

Published: May 27, 2011

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is watched by Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen as she speaks during a news conference at the US embassy after meeting with the Pakistani leaders and military officials in Islamabad on May 27, 2011. PHOTO: AFP


US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Friday there was no evidence that Pakistani government leaders knew where Osama bin Laden was hiding, following talks in Islamabad a month after he was killed.
Clinton, however, said that Pakistani officials had said that “somebody, somewhere” was providing support for Osama bin Laden in Pakistan before he was killed by US forces this month.

The secretary of state said that both Pakistan and the United States had more work to be done to fight militancy, saying their relations had reached a turning point. She urged the country to take decisive steps to defeat al Qaeda.
“Pakistan should understand that anti-Americanism and conspiracy theories will not make the problem disappear,” Clinton said.
Hillary Clinton arrived in Islamabad Friday morning, on a short visit to discuss how both countries can rebuild trust to fight the war against terrorism.
The Foreign Office said Clinton’s visit would help rebuild trust between Islamabad and Washington.
Clinton is the highest-ranking US official to visit Pakistan since the killing of al Qaeda chief  Osama bin Laden in Abbottabbad on May 2.
Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, is already in Pakistan for talks on several issues of mutual interest.
Express 24/7 correspondent Sumera Khan reported that the purpose of this trip is to rebuild the trust deficit between the two allies in the war on terror.
“The matter is not simple,” adds Khan. “Experts in Islamabad do not want Clinton’s visit to be brief and feel that the US should realise the sensitivity of the situation and the deteriorating security situation.”
According to AFP, Clinton was supposed to meet President Zardari, General Kayani and the chief of Pakistan’s powerful intelligence agency Ahmad Shuja Pasha, the State Department said.
Clinton will be accompanied in the meetings by chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen and is expected to demand more cooperation from Pakistan in the fight against al Qaeda and Taliban militants.
The United States said that Pakistan has failed to grasp just how much more it must do to quash militancy, as Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived in Islamabad amid tense relations over the killing of Osama bin Laden.
The discovery of the al Qaeda leader in a garrison town just 50 km (30 miles) away from the capital, Islamabad, on May 2 raised fresh doubts about Pakistan’s reliability as a partner in the US-led war on militancy.
“They have cooperated; we have always wanted more,” a US official told reporters travelling on Clinton’s plane ahead of the surprise visit.
“They have actually, from their perspective, done a lot. What they have never really grasped is how much more they have to do in order to protect themselves and, from our point of view, protect our interests and assist us in ways that are going to facilitate our transition in Afghanistan.”

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Baloch separatist movement not fuelled by India: US


Baloch separatist movement not fuelled by India: US

WASHINGTON: The separatist movement in Pakistan's Balochistan province is fuelled by the country's domestic policies and not India, a top US official said on Thursday. "I don't think that the existence of a terrorist or a separatist movement in Balochistan is fuelled by Indian financing or anything like that," US assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asia Robert Blake said.

"I think it's fuelled by domestic issues that are internal to Pakistan," Blake said in his interaction with Defense Writers Group in Washington. 
Pakistan has repeatedly accused India of supporting the rebels in Balochistan in order to destabilise the country.  India, however, has categorically denied the allegations.  GO TO NEWS SOURCE....

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